Breakfast at Tiffany's Section 13: Difference between revisions

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The novella ends with the narrator's hope that Holly has finally found a home, a venture in which her cat has been successful.  He regrets most that he cannot reach Holly to tell her about the cat.  He expresses that whether it be an "African hut or whatever," he hopes Holly "arrived somewhere [she] belonged" (111).
The novella ends with the narrator's hope that Holly has finally found a home, a venture in which her cat has been successful.  He regrets most that he cannot reach Holly to tell her about the cat.  He expresses that whether it be an "African hut or whatever," he hopes Holly "arrived somewhere [she] belonged" (111).


"The [http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=dichotomy dichotomy] of good and evil exists in each Capote character just as the dichotomy of daylight and nighttime exists in the [http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=aggregate aggregate] of his stories" (Hassan).
"The [http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=dichotomy dichotomy] of good and evil exists in each Capote character just as the dichotomy of daylight and nighttime exists in the [http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=aggregate aggregate] of his stories" (Hassan).  Everyone of Capote's characters either represents a good presence or a bad presence.  Toward the end of the novella, the narrator's love for Holly shows when he spends weeks trying to find her cat.  Not too many people would do something for someone else that required so much time and effort.


== Study Questions ==
== Study Questions ==
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